Related
Advertisements *
Elsewhere
Subscribe: RSS
RNB's RSS feed What is this? |
Subscribe: Email
![]() |
![]() Subscribe by Email What is this? |
Most Popular
- Ayah Pin, leader of Sky Kingdom cult, living in Thailand
- Judge won’t stop hearing on FLDS sect land sale
- Thousands of polygamous sect members show up for court hearing
- Polygamist leader Warren Jeffs faces new sex assault charge
- Evangelist Ted Haggard returns to the pulpit in Illinois
- Australia: Kingdom of Yahweh sect declares itself above law and constitution
- Jury awards $2.5 million to teen beaten by Klan members
- Peoples Temple: pain of cult massacre lives on
- Opinion writer spouts misinformation about the term ‘cult’
- Religious cult member convicted but viewed as victim of cult leader
School using Scientology methods will expand to a new campus
A Clearwater private school that uses study methods created by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard is planning to add a new campus in the Largo area.
Clearwater Academy International purchased the 2.8-acre lot at the corner of S Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue and Wyatt Street in August 2006 for $995,000. The school recently applied for a sewer permit on the site.
- Scientology vs. Education
Headmaster Jim Zwers said the expansion, spurred by a steady increase in enrollment over the past several years, is still in the planning stage. Enrollment went from 150 students in 2002 to 270 in 2007, Zwers said. “We just have a lot of students,” he said. “So we’re kind of looking for now and looking toward the future.”
Plans for the corner lot include two wings of connected modular classroom buildings, an asphalt court for hockey or volleyball and a sports field. Three of six existing tennis courts on the lot will remain. The rest will be converted to parking spaces and a basketball court.
“We’ll make it look nice. There’s lots of vegetation and a big lake there,” Zwers said.
The new campus will hold a maximum of 100 students. Zwers said school officials are considering moving the upper grades to the new location, but that decision has not yet been made. Total enrollment at the two sites will not exceed 325, he said.
The school, which serves kids in grades pre-K through 12, was formed in 1997 with the merger of three small private schools: A to Be School, Jefferson Academy and Renaissance Academy.
The school is licensed by Applied Scholastics, a nonprofit organization founded by Scientologists in 1992.
In keeping with Hubbard’s “study technology,” students are taught using a system of “check sheets” that lay out the reading assignments, definitions and concepts required to master each subject. Students are schooled in a primary tenet of Hubbard’s “tech,” which is never to read past a word they don’t understand so they won’t miss the meaning of the text that follows.
- Tom Cruise’s Church of hate tried to destroy me
Another tenet is that students learn better when they have “mass” in front of them to illustrate abstract concepts.
There are no letter grades.
Students advance to the next grade after successfully completing a check sheet for that grade.
Rita Farlow can be reached at farlow@sptimes.com or 727 445-4162.
Fast facts
Clearwater Academy International
The current campusis at 801 Drew St. in Clearwater. The school expansion will be at 1110 Wyatt St. near Largo in unincorporated Pinellas County. Tuition is $8,210 a year.
Like this story?
Today's Most Popular Articles |
|
Share this
To share this page simply copy and paste one of these URL's:
Article and Site Tools
» PermaLink to: School using Scientology methods will expand to a new campus Need a shorter link? You can remove everything after the final / » More news articles + news archive on Scientology » More religion and cult news Subscribe (RSS / Email) [What is RSS?] » RSS News Feed - All Topics: Religion News Blog RSS Feed » RSS News Feed - Single Topic: Scientology » Headlines by Email: Daily Religion News Blog Headlines |
More Article Tools
Bookmark / Tag: Del.icio.us Bookmark / Tag: Furl Save this article Email this article Print this article [Temporarily out of order] More Information Books about Scientology Relevant books (and other goodies) |



